Netizens: New China building is 'pants'

Screen shot from Sina Weibo displaying one of thousands of posts commenting on China's latest famous skyscraper. "Does the Gate to the East imply we should live beneath the 'crotch?'" the user asks.

From now until 2014, a new skyscraper will be built in China every five days, according to Chinese media.

One in particular has received a lot of attention this week.

Gate to the East (东方之门, also called by some Gate of the Orient), is a 300-meter, 69-story skyscraper under construction in Suzhou, a city of 10 million residents about 100 kilometers west of Shanghai.

The construction has inspired a great deal of criticism and humor among mainland Internet users for its shape, which users say resembles a giant pair of thermal pants or jeans.

"This [building] will work nicely as a jeans center," posted one anonymous netizen, as reported by China Youth.

"But does it look more like a pair of thermal pants or jeans? And it’s low-waist," the same netizen continued.

"I do admire the designer’s originality and creativity," mocked a netizen called Bi Cao Zhi Lan (碧草芝兰) on Sina Weibo, the Chinese equivalent of Twitter. "This building is more explicit and vivid than the 'big pants' CCTV headquarters. It's an elongated and low-cut version."

The 234-meter China Central Television headquarters in Beijing ignited controversy in China in 2009 for its resemblance to a pair of trousers. It eventually earned the nickname "big pants."

One Chinese netizen's suggestion for nighttime lighting.

Parodies

The new Suzhou landmark has led to the most widespread Internet meme in China this week.

Netizens are creating parody illustrations to ridicule Suzhou's Gate to the East. Some have transported celebrities and famous fictional characters -- from Marilyn Monroe to the Bumblebee -- to the top of the "pants." See examples here.

Liu Yang (刘洋), a Beijing-based Weibo user, mocked up a lighting design for the building. In his illustration, Liu uses red lights to punctuate a pair of women's lace underwear and fishnet stockings.

Liu's post was re-"tweeted" more than 10,000 times within an hour of being published on September 4.

The Suzhou landmark will have a 246-meter-tall, 68-meter-wide arch and is billed as the largest gate-shaped structure in the world.

According Xu Kang (徐亢), a high-ranking officer from Suzhou Qianning Property Management, the developer behind the building, the project attracted design bids from more than 10 international architecture firms.

RMJM’s design was chosen because it "uses simple geometric lines to reflect the outlines of a traditional Chinese vase-shaped gate and city gate," Xu told Xinhua, a state media organization.

"The design implies [China] is opening up its gate of history, culture and high-speed modern development to the developed Western world," Xu continued.